Oct 10, 2014

Motherboards may have multiple PCI Express slots, but sometimes those slots are too close together to be used, since graphics cards usually take up the space of two because of their coolers. Not so for the new Galaxy GeForce GTX 750 Ti Razor though.

The GeForce GTX 750 Ti graphics card may be based on the Maxwell architecture, but the GM107 doesn't produce much heat, and neither do the 2 GB of GDDR5 VRAM, since 5.4 GHz is a pretty tame setting. Still, the original card was made in a dual-slot form. Now, though, the board has been outfitted with a single-slot cooler. Admittedly, it's not the first time this happens. Still, it's good to see a mid-range board showing up now, when only high-end NVIDIA cards have been unveiled, all of which are mostly MIA anyway.

The GTX 750 Ti Razor has 1,020 MHz GPU clock, 1,080 MHz GPU Boost clock and the 2 GB of 5.4 GHz VRAM we already mentioned. The cooler chills the GPU, memory chips and VRM. The price is of around €140, which can mean anything from $140 to $177, depending on how much retailers care about exchange rates. Needless to say, you'll have to install the product in a PCI-Express 3.0 x16 slot.